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Found 19 result(s)
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GRO.data is a research data repository for the Göttingen Campus. Belonging researchers can use it for free. It serves different purposes such as: to simply preserve datasets, to keep track of changes across several versions, to share data with colleagues, to make data itself publicly available, to receive a persistent identifier upon publications.
RAVE (RAdial Velocity Experiment) is a multi-fiber spectroscopic astronomical survey of stars in the Milky Way using the 1.2-m UK Schmidt Telescope of the Anglo-Australian Observatory (AAO). The RAVE collaboration consists of researchers from over 20 institutions around the world and is coordinated by the Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam. As a southern hemisphere survey covering 20,000 square degrees of the sky, RAVE's primary aim is to derive the radial velocity of stars from the observed spectra. Additional information is also derived such as effective temperature, surface gravity, metallicity, photometric parallax and elemental abundance data for the stars. The survey represents a giant leap forward in our understanding of our own Milky Way galaxy; with RAVE's vast stellar kinematic database the structure, formation and evolution of our Galaxy can be studied.
The CLARIN-D Centre CEDIFOR provides a repository for long-term storage of resources and meta-data. Resources hosted in the repository stem from research of members as well as associated research projects of CEDIFOR. This includes software and web-services as well as corpora of text, lexicons, images and other data.
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In the digital collections, you can take a look at the digitized prints from the holdings of the GWLB Hannover free of cost. In special collections, the GWLB unites rare, valuable and unique parts of holdings that are installed as an ensemble. Deposita, unpublished works, donations, acquisition of rare books etc. were and are an important source for the constant growth of the library. These treasures and specialties - beyond their academic value - also contribute substantially to the profile of the GWLB.
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B2SHARE allows publishing research data and belonging metadata. It supports different research communities with specific metadata schemas. This server is provided for researchers of the Research Centre Juelich and related communities.
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PTB is the national metrology institute of the Federal Republic of Germany. The Open Access Repository of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt grants free access to a number of factual datasets and documents that were elaborated at PTB. This includes publications such as the "PTB-Mitteilungen", the metrological expert journal of PTB, and numerous of documents from the field of legal metrology.
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The GAVO data centre at Zentrum für Astronomie Heidelberg publishes astronomical data of all kinds – e.g., catalogues, images, spectra, time series, simulation results – in accordance with Virtual Observatory standards, making them findable and immediately usable through popular clients like TOPCAT, Aladin, or programatically through the astropy-affiliated package pyVO or the Java library STIL. We pay particular attention to providing thorough metadata to the VO Registry in order to facilitate discovery and reuse. While we have a clear focus on data produced with German contributions, we will usually publish data of other provenance, too. See https://docs.g-vo.org/DaCHS/data_checklist.html for an overview of what resource-level metadata we ask for; contact us for further information on how to publish through the German Astronomical Virtual Observatory.
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OpenAgrar is an open access repository which publishes, stores, archives and distributes publications, publication references and research data. Its resources can be searched and used by everyone. It contains amongst others theses, reports, conference proceedings, journal articles, books, institutional documents, research datasets, videos and interviews.
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ZB MED's Repository for Life Sciences offers authors the chance to publish their scientific texts and research data from the fields of medicine, health, nutritional, environmental and agricultural sciences. In accordance with the principles of Open Access, these publications can be accessed over the Internet without restrictions. There is no charge to publish, archive or use the documents.
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The Weizenbaum Library is the open access repository of the Weizenbaum Institute. It makes the open research results (publications and research data) of the Institute permanently accessible worldwide.
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This repository is a data publication platform for members of the Faculty of Physics at the LMU Munich and is designed to hold very large datasets. The repository is a collaboration between the Faculty of Physics, the University Library of LMU, and the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ). Data publications follow the FAIR principles, including the assignment of DOIs via DataCite.
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German astronomical observatories own considerable collection of photographic plates. While these observations lead to significant discoveries in the past, they are also of interest for scientists today and in the future. In particular, for the study of long-term variability of many types of stars, these measurements are of immense scientific value. There are about 85000 plates in the archives of Hamburger Sternwarte, Dr. Karl Remeis-Sternwarte Bamberg, and Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam (AIP). The plates are digitized with high-resolution flatbed scanners. In addition, the corresponding plate envelopes and observation logbooks are digitized, and further metadata are entered into the database. The work is carried out within the project “Digitalisierung astronomischer Fotoplatten und ihre Integration in das internationale Virtual Observatory”, which is funded by the DFG.
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TUdatalib is the institutional repository of the TU Darmstadt for research data. It enables the structured storage of research data and descriptive metadata, long-term archiving (at least 10 years) and, if desired, the publication of data including DOI assignment. In addition there is a fine granular rights and role management.
The focus of PolMine is on texts published by public institutions in Germany. Corpora of parliamentary protocols are at the heart of the project: Parliamentary proceedings are available for long stretches of time, cover a broad set of public policies and are in the public domain, making them a valuable text resource for political science. The project develops repositories of textual data in a sustainable fashion to suit the research needs of political science. Concerning data, the focus is on converting text issued by public institutions into a sustainable digital format (TEI/XML).
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Zvdd aims to record all digital surrogates of printed works, which are available from the internet and meet certain quality criteria. This comprised all types of printed works, such as newspapers, journals, printed music, flying leaves as well as monographs or serials.
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In the Wolfenbüttel Digital Library the Herzog August Bibliothek presents in digital facsimile selected items from its collections which are rare, outstanding, frequently used, or currently most relevant for research. All digitized titles may be accessed not only here, but also via the PICA-OPAC as long as they are monographs. The OPAC allows you to search for digitized books separately by limiting the search options within the database using the term Online Resources. Projects which provide additional indexing comprise a project-specific database, an inventory of digitized titles, information about tools and techniques, and references to literature. Here the main objective is to provide search facilities outside the scope of usual bibliographic description, such as page-related indexing.
Launched in December 2013, Gaia is destined to create the most accurate map yet of the Milky Way. By making accurate measurements of the positions and motions of stars in the Milky Way, it will answer questions about the origin and evolution of our home galaxy. The first data release (2016) contains three-dimensional positions and two-dimensional motions of a subset of two million stars. The second data release (2018) increases that number to over 1.6 Billion. Gaia’s measurements are as precise as planned, paving the way to a better understanding of our galaxy and its neighborhood. The AIP hosts the Gaia data as one of the external data centers along with the main Gaia archive maintained by ESAC and provides access to the Gaia data releases as part of Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC).